House reads dozens of bills across education, agriculture, veterans and audits; most referred to committee

2026 House of Representatives ยท February 16, 2026

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Summary

On President's Day members of the 2026 House of Representatives heard first readings of a long list of bills and joint resolutions covering retirement benefits, school funding and programming, agriculture, wind energy facilities, veterans programs and state audit provisions; the measures were assigned to the committees named on the floor for further consideration.

On President's Day the 2026 House of Representatives opened with prayer and then proceeded to a prolonged series of first readings and introductions of bills and joint resolutions covering a wide range of policy areas.

The clerk read sponsors and short titles for measures that the chamber classified as "first reading." Notable items announced on the floor included a joint resolution proposing a constitutional amendment related to term limits (sponsored by Gilhert Gil Gearhart), multiple measures addressing public retirement system provisions (sponsored by Bagneski), bills on nonpublic school transportation claims and related appropriations, and several education-related proposals (including bills to modify the Teach Iowa scholar program and to establish preschool-related funding and eligibility changes). Agriculture-related bills were read concerning manure management and food sales and distribution. Other first-read measures included bills about wind energy conversion facilities, data centers and energy reporting, and new pilots for computer-science instruction.

Several bills were explicitly referred to standing committees by the presiding officer as part of routine procedure: education, commerce, natural resources, appropriations, state government, veterans affairs, and health and human services were among committees named on the floor.

The House recorded the journal as approved earlier in the session and otherwise took no final votes on any of the many measures introduced; first readings establish committee referral and begin the formal process rather than enact policy.

What happens next: most of the measures announced will proceed to committee hearings where members and staff may solicit testimony, draft amendments and decide whether to forward the bills for further floor action.